Winter 34 512 AV
The Prairie was vast and barren. The entire landscape was uninteresting and littered with the bones of fallen creations. Some bones were easily recognizable, but others not so much. Rayage began to pounder what kind of magic he could draw out of them with the skills that Vick possessed. Although, it would be nice to know something about the bones at least little can be done about it now. He frowned, what a waste of precious magical material.
It was not the nuits idea to come out this place, and although it was better than his lab to be practicing personal magic, the place had a hostile feeling. Even though it was empty for as far as the eye could see, there were dips and divits in the earth itself, runic circles eerily marked places, and it made him altogether uneasy to be on a magical testing ground. Yet alone the place where wizards loose their latest experiments to see if they are worth keeping… What if they ran into such a creature? What then? Rayage was still so new to this power for it to do much good for him, it’s more a waste of res than anything until he could practice more.
Miro, of course, led the way. He seemed all too anxious to get the nuit ‘on the field’, and almost too confident in the developing nuits abilities. Rays teaching style was nothing like this at all. He frowned, but somewhere deep down excitement crept into his being. Adventure awaited them, even in this seemingly dull looking prairie. ”What are we doing here again?” he asked, displeasure evident in his voice.
The boy-wizard seemed rather pleased with himself for at the drop of the question he stopped in his tracks and whirled around with a big Cheshire grin on his face which told of his intentions, ”We are not doing anything.” he said, ”You are going to be doing the work here today.” Miro sounded a little too confident in himself and his words, as always. It just brought the nuit in an even more sour mood, though before Ray could say anything else the reimancer went on, ”I want you to focus on those feeling you felt as you were being initiated into my art. I want to concentrate on them, meditate, come to terms with your own emotions. Accept them.” he said shrugging, ”And then maybe you see what it takes to become a real reimancer.” the statement sounded more like a question, but it wasn’t because the boy was doubting himself. No, it was a challenge, an indirect slap to the face with Ray. The nuit caught on.
Rayage went to say something, but Miro again cut him off, ”Ill be over there. Have fun.” he said pointing in the general direction of where he was going, before he darted off not a moment later. The kid was moving fast too, too fast. Magic was guiding his steps, and the nuit had no chance of catching him, yet alone keeping him eyesight. Looking towards the direction the wizard pointed he could see a faint outline in the horizon. Was it trees? The border to some forest… he could not tell.
Though now the nuit was alone. Alone in a dangerous testing site with no experiments to call his own to protect him. He was truly alone, only him and his thoughts, or at least one thought: Miro was a horrible teacher.
The Prairie was vast and barren. The entire landscape was uninteresting and littered with the bones of fallen creations. Some bones were easily recognizable, but others not so much. Rayage began to pounder what kind of magic he could draw out of them with the skills that Vick possessed. Although, it would be nice to know something about the bones at least little can be done about it now. He frowned, what a waste of precious magical material.
It was not the nuits idea to come out this place, and although it was better than his lab to be practicing personal magic, the place had a hostile feeling. Even though it was empty for as far as the eye could see, there were dips and divits in the earth itself, runic circles eerily marked places, and it made him altogether uneasy to be on a magical testing ground. Yet alone the place where wizards loose their latest experiments to see if they are worth keeping… What if they ran into such a creature? What then? Rayage was still so new to this power for it to do much good for him, it’s more a waste of res than anything until he could practice more.
Miro, of course, led the way. He seemed all too anxious to get the nuit ‘on the field’, and almost too confident in the developing nuits abilities. Rays teaching style was nothing like this at all. He frowned, but somewhere deep down excitement crept into his being. Adventure awaited them, even in this seemingly dull looking prairie. ”What are we doing here again?” he asked, displeasure evident in his voice.
The boy-wizard seemed rather pleased with himself for at the drop of the question he stopped in his tracks and whirled around with a big Cheshire grin on his face which told of his intentions, ”We are not doing anything.” he said, ”You are going to be doing the work here today.” Miro sounded a little too confident in himself and his words, as always. It just brought the nuit in an even more sour mood, though before Ray could say anything else the reimancer went on, ”I want you to focus on those feeling you felt as you were being initiated into my art. I want to concentrate on them, meditate, come to terms with your own emotions. Accept them.” he said shrugging, ”And then maybe you see what it takes to become a real reimancer.” the statement sounded more like a question, but it wasn’t because the boy was doubting himself. No, it was a challenge, an indirect slap to the face with Ray. The nuit caught on.
Rayage went to say something, but Miro again cut him off, ”Ill be over there. Have fun.” he said pointing in the general direction of where he was going, before he darted off not a moment later. The kid was moving fast too, too fast. Magic was guiding his steps, and the nuit had no chance of catching him, yet alone keeping him eyesight. Looking towards the direction the wizard pointed he could see a faint outline in the horizon. Was it trees? The border to some forest… he could not tell.
Though now the nuit was alone. Alone in a dangerous testing site with no experiments to call his own to protect him. He was truly alone, only him and his thoughts, or at least one thought: Miro was a horrible teacher.